The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 27, 1900 Page: 4 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Th<
Real Esta'e Exchanp"-
following iB a list of ti
POSITION
the letter of the
• 122
M j
I -2 4. !
e-tate transfers during the
a* 'urniebed by B. F. Buffin
-trader of titles:
U S to W >1 Rus-i i r.s
U 3 to C G Marriott, f r,
43.95
CO Marriott ..ad wife to >• !-r.ei
w d,se 2 22 4, M
A B Brown anu hu-'.ai:^ to .ai
Butka, w d. a tract 15* 130 feet >ayi
and abutting upon lot# 8 S* blk
Kenwood, 8100
NOT THE ISSUE. OLNEY S
The saloon question is not an issue I Extracts ftom
ihe coming c.ection in this county former Secretary of State:
r territory. It ;s not an issue n the cny judgment nothing is now so
nth council district. It makes no important as that the American peo-
whiekey ! pie should take this the.r first oppor-
tunity to emphatically protest against
that excrescence uoon original rcpu V
acanism which may be called McKii>-
iffercnce, so far as the
uLsti^n is concerned, whether Ricl
rd Messall or Robert Merriman
cted. If Mr. Messall is elected to
aStoF. Hume
L) u Bccl: and
w l:, tot IS blk 11,
f r, at 27 ~ \ .'1, %4
rifi to Ira Watt'-r-
Waukomis, $75
Ira Watters and wife to T C and C
G Millard, w d, lots 15 I(l 17 18 blK II. j
Waukomis, $1200
It E Powell to T C Millard, w d, j
tract in sw i of se i 24 21 7, WK)
Jno Rom.g and wife to C B Tacket,
w d, lot 4 blk 20, Enid, #300
U S to W B Skaggs, pat, -e :i2 "^1 7 j
H W Nelson and wife to Rosa A ,
Montgomery, w d, ne 2 20 6, $1800
D S to W S Feebler, pat, nw 23 20 4 |
f c Fulton and wife to F L Mares,
w d, sw 2ft 24 II, $1500
M M Culllson and husband to T J
Beasley, w d, se i lot ti blk 2, Cullison
add, $90
CStoG W States, f r, ne 17 22 5, $4
G W StateB et al- toC Leavengood,
w d, ne 17 22 5, $2500
S H Myers and husband toll Gerdes
w d, se 25 23 <i, $4?,00
TJ S to Jno Cooley, f r, sw 34 2 3, $4
H II McGee to J C Moore, w d, lots
10 11 blk 54. Enid, $100
(J S to E B Johnson, f r, sw 34 23 3,
$4
U S to Llllie A Knower, f r, se 23 23
7, $4
M F Bartlett and husband to J T
Butts, w d, lot 15 blk 40, Enid, $50
J T Butts and wife to Mary F Bart-
lett, w d, lota 23 24 blk c8, Enid, $250
Myrtle Cromwell and husband to
C J Hughes, w d, lot 9 blk 16, Ken-
wood, $40
U 9 to Ed Mirier, f r, ne 3 22 3, $3.95
U S to Geo Lesser, f r, ne 6 21 4, $3.95
Anna Lesser to Geo Lesser, wd.wi
ne i « 21 4, $1
J H Boaz to C L Peacock, w d, lot
14 blk 25, Enid, $500
H Randan and wife to S L Munkirs,
w d, tract 100x25 tt In sec 24 21 7, $175
F Booker and wife to Jno Tyer, w d
lot 7 blk 00, Enid, $95
U S to Jno Cunningham, f r, ne 25
24 6, W
U S to F Johnson, f r, ne 34 24 7, $4
U S to w H Kocks, f r, se 35 22 4, $4
U S to w F Lee, f r, s i ne i 21 20 8,
ClCtJ. II .'II • JltBOOii , uvaiu-ui nuivii
e council by the people be will go ieyism—a tejm u-ed solely for brevity
,is the representative of this district and not becau-e Mr. McKioley i*
and not in the interest of any private j largely responsible for what it com.
business. Mr. Larrimer stands in the j prebends, except that he ha? proved
same position. There is no necessity j bioiaelf uBat'ie and unwilling to resist
lor any change in the liquor law* ! tbe pressure of p" ;tical and jjersonal
either way. They were framed by j frierd- or to withstand the tempta-
— his sails to every
PRACTICAL
HELP FOR
SUFFERING
WOMEN
men who had no thought of temper, j Uoo of trimming
ance discussions, but who wished to j w'in(j „{ apparently popular doctrine,
control the whiskey traffic. Al. ta Surely, every argument used in de-
of the pre ent law being prohibitive , fen6e 0f t.he seizure of the Philippines
is bosh. Any lawyei can tell >'ou 1 can he used a second time with even
that. The only time the present law
can become prohibitive is when a les
number than thirty names are affixed
to a petition for license, the signers
to live in tbe ward where the saloon
is to be located. Oklahoma wil>
never be a prohibition state.
people do not want prohibition.
greater iorce to justify our appro-
priation of a slice of China.
It (the election of McKinley) will
mean that ihe American people sanc-
tion a syndicated presidency a preB-
rr i idency for the Republican party by
The I J
^I the money
tlon of cap
italists .ntent upon securing national
n aid of their particular
prohibition bill will never par, the j ^ .,ation
tbe legislature, and. if it did. woul11 ' interest4
he overwhelmingly j Slock exchaDRe paDics, often made
people at the polls. Old hne p j orally irrational and
bition has been tried and. a amue^^ ^ by ^ wh0
Jthod wiU l/ave to know how to make their predictions
Z brou„ht forward to accomplish 1 Rood and are sure to profit by what-
, . t nni f hv a few neo-i ever caprices the marliet maJ' ln-
results. ,A ere« n°uc, by a«ewpeo- J ^ ^ du.t in the balance
pie, is being raised, and is very
advised.
The Wave places the name of Rob-
ert Merriman before the people be
cause he is the fusion nominee
should have the entire fusion support.
He should be elected as a fusionist
In order to guarantee a fusion legis-
lature. The Wave has the greatest
respect for and confidence in Mr.
Messall and should he be the people's
choice he will d# his duty.
compared with the enduring evils to
result from the vicious national poli-
cies which the American people are
and now desired to impress with the seal
U S to Jas Gardner, f r, nw 21 23 4,
$4
U S to A Moore, pat, ne 14 20 7
U S to A Brown, f r, sw 34 22 7, $4
ww Rowland and wife to F Bul-
lard, w d, lots 24 25 blk 3, Rowlands
3d addition to Waukomis, $65
U S to S Lamb, f r, ne 15 24 3, $4
U S to A L Long, f r, sw 10 24 3, $4
U S to C S Long, f r, ne 14 24 3, $4
U S to J A Lamb, f r, se 10 24 3, $4
U S to M M Wilson, f r, nw 15 24 3,
$4
U S to E B Jupe, f r, nw 11 24 3, $4
The Woods County Enterprise says
'Vote for Dennis and statehood.'
Can't we votejfor Dennis withoutjvot-
ing tor statehood, Mr. Enterprise ?
A young man shot himself at Perry
last week over a mad passion he felt
for one of the feminine gender. He
didn't hurt himself much, though. It
Is impossible for a fool to get serious-
ly injured.
Roosevelt said in 1896: "lam will-
ing to head an armed force to go to
Washington and prevent Bryan's in-
auguaration in case he is elected.
Sleep on, baby, 'tis only the cock
rowing.
It is said that Tom Doyle, of Perry,
can't swallow Neff. Neff is glad of
that. He can make a better cam.
paign outside of Doyle's stomach.
of their favor and to thus perpetuate
indefinitely.
The fusion county convention could
have made no better selection for
county treasurer than H. C. Kennedy.
He is an honest, upright and success-
ful farmer: one who has made his
farm blossom as the rose. A visit to
the Kennedy farm, adjoining this
city on the north, would be beneficial
to anyone. It is a monument to in.
dustry, thrift and good management.
Mr. Kennedy will receive the entire
fusion strength and when elected
will make Garfield county an excel-
lent officer.
f-T-Vn: ills of women oversha^®" ^"medical treat-
I Some women are ^eIt „n,!er <anas
.i,«'nr" d"he"w.m.n who consuH Mn. HnUum fnd
*„Tinsel prauic.1 stance.
Mrs PinVham's address is Lynn.
M Mrs. Mabel Good, Correctionville,
la.', tells how Mrs. Pinkham saved
her life. She says:
- I cannot thank you enough for
what your medicine has done for me.
I can recommend it as one of the best i
medicines on earth foT all WOI™r" s ale weakness and at
"" ' Vh" SSXtor. did no
last became bedfast. Thre. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound. After taking ^able t0 do an my house-
W0rk. I know that your
medicine raised me from
a bed of sickness and
perhaps death, and am
very thankful for what it
has done for me. I hope
that every suffering
woman may be Per*
suaded to try your medicine."
Get Mrs. Pinkham's advice
as soon as you begin to be
puzzled. The sick headaches
and dragging sensation come
from a curable cause. Write
help as soon as they ap-
pear.
Mrs. Dole Stanley,
Campbe llsburg, Ind.,
■writes: " Dear Mrs.
Pinkham—I was troubled
with sick headache and
was so weak and nervous,
I could hardly go. A
friend called upon me oije
evening and recommended Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Comoound saying that she knew that it would cure me. I then
sent for your medicine and after taking five bottles of it, I was
entirely cured. I cannot praise it enough."
i 1 i
Mark Hanna challenged Mr. Bryan
to a joint debate, the other day.
Bryan refused the challenge on the
ground that he would debate with no
one whose position was inferior to his
own. He said: "If the republican
committee will certify that Mr.
Hanna is to be president, in case of
republican success, I shall willingly
meet him in joint debate." Banna
evidently thinks that he is president,
in reality, if not in name, he simply
forgot *the rules of decorum, that is
all.
The Billings News says it isn t
right to go to church on Sunday and
act sanctimonious and then cheat
your fellow men on week days.
Ex-Governor Samuel J. Crawford,
known as the "War Governor of
Kansas," and a life-long republican,
has declared for Bryan. He cannot
agree with Mr. McKinley's colonial
policy. Theg. o. p. will give one
lwnglng look, wave Its hand in sad
farewell, and vanish away some of
these davi-
If Senator Havens don't defeat
Bryan in the coming election it won't
be the fault of his editorials in the
■Sun-Eagle. Read that paper this
week, ye supporters of Bryan, and
then gohowl and weep (In sack cloth
and ashes) over your lost cause.
When Hanna called Mr. Bryan a
hypocrite in his speech before a few
thousand Chicagoibuslness men, he
met with voluminous hisses. Hanna
would like for people to think that
Bryan bore some resemblance to him-
•elf.
The Wichita Eagle says Neff has no
more show to carry Blaine county
than he has the state of Maine.
Guess Neff will have to carry Maine
and just show the Eagle a point or
two on what he can do.
The Jennings News relates that
a cow kicked a cross eyed girl in the
forehead and made her eyesatraight,
They burled her with her eyes
straight, too, It intimates.
Republican party leaders hate
Bryan because he is honest, not be-
cause he is the Democraticcandldate
for the presidency.
Rev. Job Ingram, of Kingfisher,
Territorial G. A. R. Chaplain and
Territorial Baptist Missionary, has
renounced the Republican party and
declared for Neff and Bryan.
The boys should begin bidding
Frank Bradileld goodbye. There'll
be tearful times when Frank has to
leave the register of deeds office
next January.
The Sun.Eagle intimates that
Charley Hunter got the resolution
through the Fusion convention,
wherein Gov. Barnes was mentioned,
by means of a box of cigars. Col.
Havens and Charley Hunter aeem to
have a cigar mixture inside the
casing which incloses their brains.
Wonder if this is all that ever came
to Charley by means of cigars.'' He
has a habit of trying to claim profits
and praise for wnatever good is done
in Garfield county.
The reporter of the Perry Enter-
prise confesses to being "back-
woodsy," and says he is used to milk,
ing cows. He might send some milk
over with the Enterprise sometime.
Neff will speak in Pottawatomie
county October 1 and 2.
AN OBLIGING CONDUCTOR.
A good story is being told on a
Santa Fe conductor, who runs through
Wichita, (probably Frank Conway)
says the Newtou Kansas-Republican.
The story goes that he came into
Wichita late and was anxtous to get
out as soon as possible and make up
lost time. Toe passengers alighted
anl got aboard while the expressmen
and baggagemen were making trunks
and baggage fly, and just as the con-
ductor was about to give the engin-
eer tbe signal to start, a Miss ap-
peared and wanted to take the tram.
She got her ticket and tbe conduc-
tor said, "Here, give me that grip,
I'll 'take it in, and you climb on the
train."
But I've got a parasol and basket,
too, replied the girl.
That's all .ight," retorteJ the
conductor, "I'll look after them, too.
You get right on the car."
The girl seemed banging back for
something, and while the conductor
was importuning her to hurry she
finally said: " Well, I want to kiss my
big sister goodbye."
"Never mntd that, " said the con-
ductor, "I'll attend to that; climb on
the train. '
Pleasant Time.
The Kensington Club met Thursday
with Mrs. Watkins at her home on
tbe east hill. Quite a number of the
members are out of the city, but
those present had a most delightful
time as they always «o when they
meet with Mrs
present were:
Mesdames
Buffington,
Dow,
Curran,
Denton,
Hoffman,
Watkins. Those
Watrous.
Crnm«i*U^
Evans,
Cha ptnan,
Wilcox. t
Kirk.
Mrs. Watkins was assisted by Mrs.
Wilcox.
Some men have very small minds if
their ideas are photographs of it.
We know a man in tl ls town who
couldn't trade his mind to a flea for a*
cbew of slippery elm bark. The flea
would graciously decline and shake
his fat sides chuckling ovei the bad
bargain he didn't make.
f
"The best girl 1 ever knew," says
a philosopher, "tbe one who has the
most true friends and admirers, the
girl who, in short, comes nearer to
being what every wide awake girl
wishes to be, may oe described in the
phrase which I have frequently
heard applied to her—'She is honest.1
Absolute sincerity, through and
through, characterizes her life, and
shines in her face. She is often con-
ventional; popular people have to be.
But she is always her true self. Be-
cause she is free from all manner of
shams, she is loved by everybody, A
better adornment than imitation dia.
monds is tbe jewel of slncereity."
An Illinois republican says mat if
Lincoln and Grant were alive today
they would vote for Bryan. That's
what an Enid old soldier, who seryed
through the civil war, says.
A republican postmaster editor de-
clines to think of the possibility tof
Bryan being elected. It gives biui
the blind staggers. He won't enter,
tain the thought for a moment.
The wily Hanna tried to postpone
the great Pennsylvania strike until
after election. It don't agree with
the full dinner pail racket, you Know.
W. T. Stoalabarger is a sure win-
ner for assessor. He is running so
[fast that you can only see a streak iry,
the air.
Hanna wants to come
Bryan wants to go east.
A banker's bank, with a capitaliza-
west and1 tion of $500,000 is in prospect at Ok-
ahoma City.
A green worm plague nas gotton
hold of Perry, Some genius over
there should invent green worm soup
The Guthrie Leader calls it
'Flynn tsung U yamen."
the
David B. Hill is to take the stump
and tell the westerners why they
should vote for Bryan. We will next
hear of your Uncle Grover stumping
Kansas. ___________
Political debaters indulge in sar-
casm In Kay county. A populist laid
a republican in the shade the other
day: but nobody was seriously wound-
ed.
It makes the Wichita Eagle mad
when people say that Flynn only did
hlsduty. It says that's all Dewey,
or Grant or G ow did.
The Wichita Eagle says thai the
finest climate for consumptives can
be found at the base of the Wichita
mountain -
Everybody is busy at Galveston.
There is no difference between cap-
italist and laborer. All are working
to rebuild the city.
According to the Newkirk Demo,
crat fusion will carry Kay county by
1,000 majority.
Blood Troubles
. As the blood contains all the elements necessary to sustain life, it is impor-
tant that it be kept free of all impurities, or it becomes a source of disease,
poisoning instead of nourishing the body, and loss of health is sure to follow.
feome notions enter the blood from without, through the skin by absorption, or
inoculation- others from within, as when waste products accumulate in the
■vstem and ferment, allowing disease germs to develop and be taken into the
Circulation. While all blood troubles have one common or1
Cancer,
Scrofula,
Old Sores,
Rheumatism,
Contagious
ruuiaiiun „ each has some Blood Poison,
pecXrity to distinguish it from the other. Contagious Dloo3 Poison, Scrofula,
Cancer, Rheumatism, Eczema and other blood diseases can be distinguished by Cfy#*OfVfC UlCCrSe
a certain sore ulcer, eruption or inflammation appearing on the skin. Every blood
diseaae shows sooner or later on the outside and on the weakest part of the body, or where it finds the least rtf uuacg
Many mistake the sore or outward sign for the real disease, and attempt a cure by the use of salves, liniments and <At>
.„,,iirarinns Valuable time is lost and no permanent benefit derived from such treatment.
blood troubles. A record of 50 vears of auocessful cures proves
unfailing specific for all blood ana skin troubles.
Freo MotHcal Treatment. — Our Medical Department is in charge of
skilled physicians, who have made blood and skin diseases a life study, so If you nave
—— Contagious Blood Poison, Cancer, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Eciema, an Old Sore or ITlctr,
or any similar Wood trouble, write them fully for advice about your case. All correspondence is conducted in strictest confi-
dence. We make no charge for this service. Book ou blood and skin diaeuses free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Oft.
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Isenberg, J. L. The Enid Weekly Wave. (Enid, Okla. Terr.), Vol. 7, No. 38, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 27, 1900, newspaper, September 27, 1900; (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc112172/m1/4/: accessed April 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.